The day book. (Chicago, Ill.) 1911-1917, January 15, 1917, LAST EDITION, Image 20

Image and text provided by University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Library, Urbana, IL

1extended the memento Nellie had socherished."Does it match?" he askedr"Why where did you get it?"stammered Warren. "It is the otherhalf!""I think the owner can explain toyou. She id there."He led Warren to the doorway ofthe interior room. He gently urged'him over its threshold. He heardmutual exclamations of amazementand joy. Then he closed the doorand, good man that he was, stoodchuckling, rubbing his hands together gleesomely.They sat at the supper table, thesethree, under a spell of rare happiness an hour later, Nellie radiantWarren immersed in glad content"We'll weave out this blessed romance this way," pronounced wholehearted John Wilson: "You will getmarried, you two, and take care ofme for the rest of my life. Nellieshall be daughter and wife, and you,Warren Boyd I am getting older, Ineed an active partner that will beyou." , .(Copyright, 1917, W. G. Chapman.)' your head just so, until Dame Fashion puts on your newest oonnet.It is made of ribbed silk, with insertion of val. lace and the up-flaringruffles are also of val. It is all in.white even the ribbon streamers.The wee slippers are pale blueODD, ISN'T IT?Bucyrus, O. The day of the bigsausages again has arrived. Threefarmers, Jacob Reinhard, Wm. Halliwell and P. A. Poister, made sausages, 51, 54 and 55 feet long respectively. 0-7OBABY'S BONNET FROM PARIS"By Betty BrownAnd now, little Miss Vanity, holdL-rribbed silk, and the slipper casematches them in color. A famousman-milliner in Pans designed thesedainty things especially for FashionArt Magazine ana TheJa? Book,- ' -